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7-year-old boy helps reunite runaway tortoise with its family after 9 months on the run

7-year-old boy helps reunite runaway tortoise with its family after 9 months on the run
GALA ON THE 25TH. AND TONIGHT IN LENEXA. A RUNAWAY PET, A RUNAWAY PET IS FINALLY BACK HOME. NOW THAT PET, A 17 YEAR OLD TORTOISE MISSING FOR NINE MONTHS. KMBC NINES PEYTON HEADLEE TELLS US HOW IT ESCAPED AND HOW IT’S BACK WITH HIS FAMILY. HELLO, DEAR. MEET FREDERICA, THE TORTOISE. SHE DOES GO PRETTY FAST. FREDERICA LIVES IN LENEXA WITH HER OWNER. JAN, THEY’RE KIND OF COOL. THEY DON’T DO ANY TRICKS OR ANYTHING. BUT FREDERICA DOES HAVE A TRICK. THIS IS NOT HER FIRST RODEO. THE 17 YEAR OLD RUSSIAN TORTOISE IS QUITE THE ESCAPE ARTIST. APPARENTLY SHE WAS MORE CLEVER THAN ME. NINE MONTHS AGO, JAN GAVE FREDERICA A FREE ROAM OF THE FENCED IN BACKYARD. FREDERICA FOUND A WAY OUT. SHE FOUND A GAP UNDERNEATH MY BAY WINDOW WHERE SHE COULD JUST GO TO LA VISTA, BABY. SO JAN STARTED SEARCHING. I HIT SOCIAL MEDIA HOT AND HEAVY. SHE OFFERED A $400 REWARD, HUNG UP POSTERS ALL OVER JOHNSON COUNTY. SHE EVEN HAD A BLOODHOUND SEARCH THE WOODS BEHIND HER HOUSE. JAN HAD JUST ABOUT LOST HOPE UNTIL MAY 20TH OF THIS YEAR. I TURNED AROUND AND THEN I SAW THE TORTOISE, LIKE WALKING JUST A FEW HOUSES DOWN. SEVEN YEAR OLD HENRY MYLES SPOTTED HER. I LOOKED LIKE IT WASN’T FROM AROUND HERE. HENRY KNEW FREDERICA HAD BEEN MISSING AND SHE COULD EVEN LOSE IT IS MY QUESTION. SO HE AND HIS PARENTS GAVE JAN A CALL. I WAS AT WORK AND THEY ALL THOUGHT I WON THE LOTTERY BECAUSE I YELLED. NOW JAN IS REUNITED WITH HER TORTOISE. HERE SHE IS. HENRY GOT THAT $400 REWARD, 200 IS GOING INTO SAVINGS AND 200 IS SPENT. FREDERICA IS STILL WORKING ON HER NEXT ESCAPE. AND FREDERICA DOES HAVE SOME BATTLE SCARS. HER CELL IS SCRATCHED, HER EYE IS SCRATCHED. THEY THINK SHE WAS ATTACKED BY A RACCOON, BUT SHE MADE IT. SHE SURE DID. AND IN COLD WEATHER, YEAH. NOW, HENRY IS SAVING $200. THE OTHER 200 SPENT ON. DO WE KNOW? HE SAID LEGOS, A COOKIE AND SOMETHING FOR SOCCER. OH, YEAH. LEGOS ARE EXPENSIVE. YEAH, ABSOLUTELY. COOKIE IS DELICIOUS. THAT’S RIGHT. YEAH. RUSSIAN TORTOISES, HOWEVER, HAVE A LIFE EXPECTANCY OF 100 YEARS. JUST ONE CORRECTION TO PEYTON’S STORY. IT WASN’T ON THE RUN. IT WAS ON TH
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7-year-old boy helps reunite runaway tortoise with its family after 9 months on the run
A 17-year-old tortoise named Fredericka is finally back home after being on the run for nine months.Watch the video above for more.Fredericka is a pet tortoise that lives in Lenexa, Kansas, with her owner Jan Langton. She has been her proud owner since 2015. “I don't know why I like a tortoise, but I do,” Langton said. “They're kind of cool. They don't do any tricks or anything.”But Fredericka does have one trick — the Russian tortoise is quite the escape artist. Nine months ago, Langton let Fredericka roam free in the fenced-in backyard. Langton checked the bolsters of the fence and made sure she couldn’t fit through them. Fredericka still found a way out. "Apparently, she was more clever than me,” Langton said. “She found a gap underneath my bay window where she could just go. Hasta la vista, baby."So, Langton started searching. "I hit social media hot and heavy after I looked up and found that they can travel 18 miles a day,” she said. “I hit Facebook and all of the lost and found groups.”Langton offered a $400 reward, hung up posters all over town, and even had a bloodhound search the woods behind her house. “A herpetologist at Brookfield Zoo told me that she would die if it got to under 60 degrees. And he goes well, she might survive 37 or so if she got covered up a little bit. But for winter, she's going to have to go six feet under the ground because of the freeze line,” Langton said. Langton had just about lost hope until May 20 of this year. Just a few houses down from her, 7-year-old Henry Miles spotted the beloved pet. “I was laying in the hammock and then I turned around and I saw the tortoise, like, walking and my dad ran to get a bucket and he put her in there,” Miles said. "It looked like it wasn't from around here."Miles had seen the posters and knew Fredericka had been missing. So, he and his parents gave Langton a call. “I was at work, and they all thought I won the lottery because I yelled, Are you kidding me?” Langton said. “I was so happy and so shell-shocked because how was she going to live out there?”Now, Langton is reunited with her tortoise and Miles got his $400 reward. “Henry sat there and counted it all and he was so happy and Mom later said that every time they’d go past the intersection, he’d say Tortoise lost $400 reward, he would say, that is a $400 tortoise. We need to find that $400 tortoise,” Langton said. “$200 is going into savings and $200 is spent,” Miles said. Fredericka didn’t make it back unharmed. She has scratches on her shell and her eye. Langton said the vet thinks she was attacked by a raccoon or a dog.

A 17-year-old tortoise named Fredericka is finally back home after being on the run for nine months.

Watch the video above for more.

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Fredericka is a pet tortoise that lives in Lenexa, Kansas, with her owner Jan Langton. She has been her proud owner since 2015.

“I don't know why I like a tortoise, but I do,” Langton said. “They're kind of cool. They don't do any tricks or anything.”

But Fredericka does have one trick — the Russian tortoise is quite the escape artist. Nine months ago, Langton let Fredericka roam free in the fenced-in backyard. Langton checked the bolsters of the fence and made sure she couldn’t fit through them. Fredericka still found a way out.

"Apparently, she was more clever than me,” Langton said. “She found a gap underneath my bay window where she could just go. Hasta la vista, baby."

So, Langton started searching.

"I hit social media hot and heavy after I looked up and found that they can travel 18 miles a day,” she said. “I hit Facebook and all of the lost and found groups.”

Langton offered a $400 reward, hung up posters all over town, and even had a bloodhound search the woods behind her house.

boy helps runaway tortoise reunite with its family
Hearst Owned
Henry Miles collects $400 reward from Jan Langton for finding her tortoise. 

“A herpetologist at Brookfield Zoo told me that she would die if it got to under 60 degrees. And he goes well, she might survive 37 or so if she got covered up a little bit. But for winter, she's going to have to go six feet under the ground because of the freeze line,” Langton said.

Langton had just about lost hope until May 20 of this year. Just a few houses down from her, 7-year-old Henry Miles spotted the beloved pet.

“I was laying in the hammock and then I turned around and I saw the tortoise, like, walking and my dad ran to get a bucket and he put her in there,” Miles said. "It looked like it wasn't from around here."

Miles had seen the posters and knew Fredericka had been missing. So, he and his parents gave Langton a call.

“I was at work, and they all thought I won the lottery because I yelled, Are you kidding me?” Langton said. “I was so happy and so shell-shocked because how was she going to live out there?”

Now, Langton is reunited with her tortoise and Miles got his $400 reward.

“Henry sat there and counted it all and he was so happy and [his] Mom later said that every time they’d go past the intersection, he’d say Tortoise lost $400 reward, he would say, that is a $400 tortoise. We need to find that $400 tortoise,” Langton said.

“$200 is going into savings and $200 is spent,” Miles said.

Fredericka didn’t make it back unharmed. She has scratches on her shell and her eye. Langton said the vet thinks she was attacked by a raccoon or a dog.